Our collective reality and the belief that creates it our not capable of sustaining our planet for much longer so the cause (being our beliefs) must change. So, then, what causes these beliefs? How can we change them for a belief better suited for creation? — Thinking
I want to know a belief that is very empowering that serves to cherish the life and planet here and now. — Thinking
To what extent is an immediate relationship with our non-human surroundings a language? — Joshs
Therefore, any science based on drawing a conclusion from a pattern is not reliable — Georgios Bakalis
I am still unclear about what you are saying. Perhaps you are trying to say that information is a distinct thing in its own right and that consciousness is merely an expression of this underlying information. — Gary Enfield
Put another way, there is nothing to suggest that physical existence is dependent on such an information base - and if Matter/Energy can exist independently then there is no basic requirement for an information layer to existence. — Gary Enfield
but i thought you wanted to add a little more to make it clear for everyone. :up: — Adughep
The last phrase might be a little confusing "An animated pattern is a process" ? maybe you can say more details about the process. — Adughep
could be the first evidence of that missing factor to explain everything we have been talking about! — Pop
Other authors may find different ways to sub-divide consciousness, but ultimately an explanation must be found in the basic processes of nature.... and I don't see you focusing-in on what the necessary base-level requirements might be. — Gary Enfield
If information preservation is fundamental, then everything is integrating information. — Pop
Almost everyone accepts evolution as a process of change and increasing complexity, once the first cell existed - but things must be very different before life - without an alternate evolutionary mechanism - just basic chemistry (with lightning or without it). — Gary Enfield
I think it needs to be understood that everything exists in a relation to something else. Indeed everything exists in a relation to a multiplicity of externalities. It is not a static relationship, but an evolving one. So everything exists in a process of interrelational evolution - both the living and nonliving evolve through a process of interrelational evolution. If this is true for everything, then it is also true for the first living cell. This gives me the confidence to state that the first living cell arose through a process of interrelational evolution - simply because no alternative of being exists! — Pop
However the announcement today from CERN about the discovery of a new, previously undetected, force exerting a mysterious influence of unknown origin - could be the first evidence of that missing factor to explain everything we have been talking about! — Gary Enfield
You have two recipients of water: one with water + DNA sample, and second recipient with empty water.
If you put them close(but not real contact) and you spin them using centrifugation, so each sample can emit electromagnetic fields . After some time the electromagnetic result can be replicated into the empty container and after DNA analysis of the empty container, they found DNA is present there as well.
So the conclusion is the DNA from the first container got replicated to the empty container without physical contact, only by electromagnetic fields. — Adughep
I believe that the evolution main purpose is to preserve information, so it can evolve maybe in something better or more complex.It does not matter how you evolve and what caused it(that's why the causes are not stored ), but if you have new information it tries to keep it if it can. — Adughep
Indeed, I see them too... — Gus Lamarch
If the only evidential life in the Universe so far is "Humanity", by direct consequence, Man is also the "Ontological Point", that is, the "existential center of awareness of the Universe", since he is the only one evidently aware of its own sapience.
Therefore, Earth is the "center of the conscious experience of the Universe", and the Ontological Point - Humanity. — Gus Lamarch
you can even say the main purpose of the evolution is to preserve the exchange of information.If some cell did not evolved into something more complex, it means it could not preserve the old information anymore. — Adughep
It strikes me as amusing that most life on earth remains microbial. We don't seem to care for it. — Tom Storm
In my opinion the Universe gives priority on interactions (of any kind) that preserve the old information.And to interactions that destroys "the old information", it makes them start back from basics. — Adughep
I wonder what would happen if we solved the question of anabiosis and actually managed do create it in a lab. I suspect the debate would hardly change. — Tom Storm
We are all chemicals interacting with other chemicals. — Becky
In my opinion, what you want is somehow related to finding the purpose of life.Which is a hard subject and might need another topic open. — Adughep
Because of so many energy interactions and no limits, messy energies and particles can always form something new.
"Why" they work like this, for now i dont think there is a logical reason for it.
Is like asking why some "living cells" evolve into dinosaurs or why "living cells" evolve into birds, dogs or humans ? — Adughep
I am not sure what you want to find. You want to know the purpose of life ? — Adughep
So then "The relationship of energy and information = another state of higher(or different) energy" .Is not necessary that the result to be a higher energy, it can result in a different energy type (lower or higher).
Is the same principle when using a beam of light, if you amplify it and excite the electrons ( you add information) it becomes laser. — Adughep
The same principle applies to cells when they evolve into something new, just with other types of energy level — Adughep
The human "consciousness" is an ordered organization of "living cells" from the result of multiple stages of evolution of multiple complex cells. — Adughep
As you said before bacteria also has "consciousness", but you can not compare it to humans. — Adughep
That might support my idea that the living and complex cells are at base multiple waves of energy or maybe not ? :) — Adughep
I' m inclined to think that "the order" and the "life cells" you see today are a process of evolution, (the end result ) and are not something that emerge on Earth because we had from start a "friendly", ordered and stable planet. — Adughep
The trouble with dismissing the emphasis on Amino Acids and Nucleotides is that those chemicals remain part of the only mechanism that is known to work, and as some Amino Acids do form spontaneously, it is hard to imagine that something would 'strive to achieve' other forms through some 3rd evolutionary process. — Gary Enfield
Frankly I am just looking for something potentially viable, rather than philosophical point scoring.
What I dislike are exponents of certain philosophies that deny evidence which counters their preferred view. — Gary Enfield
In the non-intellectual realm (pure meditation, for example), there is no conceptualization so this does not become an issue and Absolute Truth is present — synthesis
The Relative and The Absolute stand opposed to each other as that which we use intellectually (the Relative) and that which exist outside of our intellect (The Absolute). All things knowable (intellectual) are relative. These things that exist intellectually are constantly changing, exist in time, therefore their relative nature.
The Absolute (e.g., The Dao, God) is unknowable, unchangeable, and exists outside of time. It is something you may sense or feel but never something you can know (intellectually). — synthesis
If it was "a long period of order" as you said, then most likely our evolution will progress much much faster. — Adughep
Dont you think that every process that requires a lot of time to finish(millions years) or has a small chance to even exist is because of the chaos and disorder around it ? — Adughep
.As we see now water looks like a good structure to form life cells.
Though in the universe might be elements more stronger and better then water in forming life — Adughep
But the process of forming the "life cell" was not ordered at all. In my opinion the process was made using a lot of failed and chaotic results ( the results of thousands, millions or maybe more attempts) — Adughep
To compare the start of forming the "life cell" as the start when the Earth planet was born is also not so correct — Adughep
If i had to estimate the chances of forming a single "life cell" is something similar with "Rutherford's experiment" — Adughep
If you have a very small chance to form a "life cell", then the process can not be ordered.And i think this is true with every process that transforms or creates something new, very small chances = high disorder. — Adughep
However, returning to your point, I am absolutely sure that no matter how long you left them, if you put all the elements that make up a living being in a container, they would probably never make a living entity. — Gary Enfield
I said that evolution was only possible when the mechanism got going - and the only known mechanism ever, is the living cell. — Gary Enfield
I have always said that I believe in Evolution once the mechanism got going,. — Gary Enfield
The argument about biological information is however that organic life retains memory in a sense that inorganic matter does not. — Wayfarer
The word "evolution" has a very specific meaning in biology — T Clark
No inanimate matter has evolved in that sense, by definition. If it had, it would be alive. — T Clark
It showed why organisms are fundamentally different from any kind of nonliving material. There is nothing in the inanimate world that has a genetic program which stores information with a history of three thousand million years!’
I'm not sure what this means, but the claim that natural selection acts on non-living matter is not supported by any science I've ever heard of. That's my non-dogmatic way of saying it's not true. — T Clark
As Aristotle found, there's not matter without form, and thus without information. — Olivier5
The significance of this is that something has to bring the whole lot together because it is only as a whole, that life has viability - and therefore some mechanism/process needs to bring all the separate elements together in one place. But what could drive that circumstance other than chance? — Gary Enfield
True. That's because Materialism is a commonsense view of reality. Information & Energy are invisible and intangible until embodied in some material form — Gnomon
"Mass" literally means "coming together" of causation & form. In his theory of Relativity, Einstein also asserted that all things (physical objects) are relative. The real world is an interconnected network of relationships. Yet, both the connections (links) and the communications are forms of the fundamental universal (spiritual) power of Enformation. — Gnomon
Spiritualism, in philosophy, a characteristic of any system of thought that affirms the existence of immaterial reality imperceptible to the senses. — Gnomon
In my architecture, to my chagrin, I never had total control over the final outcome. But it usually worked-out OK. :grin: — Gnomon
In my view, matter is merely the container for information. — Gnomon
So, my worldview is compatible with Plato & Spinoza, while yours is amenable to Aristotle's. Yet, I don't base my philosophy on ancient authorities, but on modern reasoning. :smile: — Gnomon
So, I sometimes refer to the Enformer as "Spinoza's God", which is usually taken to be the physical universe (Nature) itself. — Gnomon